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|    rec.games.trivia    |    Discussion about trivia games    |    32,813 messages    |
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|    Message 31,037 of 32,813    |
|    Pete Gayde to Mark Brader    |
|    Re: RQFTCIWSSSG12 Game 8, Rounds 9-10: s    |
|    30 Jul 22 11:56:19    |
      From: pete.gayde@gmail.com              Mark Brader wrote:       > These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2012-06-25,       > and should be interpreted accordingly. All questions were written       > by members of What She Said and/or of Smith & Guessin', but have       > been reformatted and may have been retyped and/or edited by me.       > I will reveal the correct answers in about 3 days.       >       > For further information, including an explanation of the """       > notation that may appear in these rounds, see my 2021-07-20       > companion posting on "Reposted Questions from the Canadian       > Inquisition (RQFTCI*)".       >       >       > ** Game 8, Round 9 - Science - Various Scientific Trivia       >       > 1. Disregarding the temporary symbols used for elements not yet       > confirmed as discovered or synthesized, there """are""" two       > letters of the alphabet that don't appear in any element symbols       > in the periodic table. Name *both*.              Q and J              >       > 2. What is unique in the human body about the hyoid bone?       >       > 3. If you are exploring an ocean reef at 33 feet (10 m) below the       > surface of the water, how many atmospheres of total pressure       > are you experiencing?              2; 3              >       > 4. What Canadian is known as the "father of modern medicine"       > and the "father of pathology"?       >       > 5. John Macleod of Canada won the Nobel prize for the discovery       > of what?       >       > 6. Name *either one* of the two scientists who announced the       > discovery of "cold fusion" in 1989.       >       > 7. In what city """is""" Canada's Science and Technology Museum?       >       > 8. To continue having marijuana available for research when it was       > still illegal to use, the Canadian government decided to grow its       > stash in an abandoned mine shaft near a certain Canadian city,       > which became known as the marijuana-growing capital of Canada.       > Then the operation was moved to an undisclosed location when       > more space was needed. Anyway, name the city where the mine was.              Edmonton; Vancouver              >       > 9. It is sometimes stated (and it was in the original version of       > this question) that Isaac Newton was born the day Galileo died,       > although this is the result of a confusion of calendars and       > conflicting information. But which British theoretical physicist       > and cosmologist actually was born on the 300th anniversary of       > Galileo's death?              Hawking              >       > 10. Zoologists honored Hugh Hefner by naming Sylvilagus palustris       > hefneri for him. What kind of animal is this?              Rabbit              >       >       > ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge - Trivial Descriptions       >       > For this week's challenge round, either we give a description       > and you name what we are talking about, or you are given a term       > and must describe what it means.       >       > * A. Describing Art and Wax       >       > A1. I make a sculpture out of wax; I cover it tightly with a       > thick layer of clay. I bake the clay in an oven, where       > the wax melts and runs out. I now use the hollow clay as       > a mold for liquid bronze, gold, glass, etc., producing       > a 3-dimensional object that looks like the original wax       > sculpture. What is this technique called?       >       > A2. I coat a metal or glass object with a layer of wax.       > I then scrape away some wax to leave a design on the object.       > I dip it briefly into a bath of strong acid, which eats away       > at the area not covered by wax. After cleaning the wax off,       > I now have a pattern on my original object. What is this       > process called? Gunsmiths have used it for 400 years.       >       >       > * B. Describing Scientific Terms       >       > B1. A female Komodo dragon that has been living in a zoo       > without contact with other members of her species lays an       > egg which hatches and grows to be another female Komodo.       > Give the term for this asexual reproduction, where       > growth, development, and eventually birth happens without       > fertilization.       >       > B2. On a hot day, your son does not fully close the freezer door.       > Air constantly circulates into the freezer, where the       > rapid temperature drop causes the moisture in the air to       > turn directly into a coating of hoar frost. What is the       > scientific term for matter transformation directly from gas       > to solid without forming a liquid? It is sometimes known as       > sublimation (the same as the reverse transformation directly       > from solid to gas), but we want the other term that refers       > specifically to a transformation *from* gas *to* solid.       >       >       > * C. Describing Earth-Surface Terminology       >       > C1. If you are a property owner in Northern Ontario, your land       > may or may not be rising in value, but it is likely to be       > rising in elevation, by 4-8 mm a year, due to "isostatic       > rebound". Explain this.       >       > C2. Throughout the Pacific Ring of Fire are found tectonic       > subduction zones. Describe what is happening at a subduction       > zone.              One plate moves under an adjacent plate              >       >       > * D. Describing Canadian Historical/Political Phrases       >       > D1. This term was first coined in the 1983 report "Native       > Children and the Child Welfare System". It refers to       > the practice, beginning in the 1960s, of apprehending       > an unusually high percentage of children from aboriginal       > Canadians, usually without prior knowledge or permission of       > their families and bands, and adopting them out to white       > middle-class families. The victims of this practice were       > the subject of numerous news reports, case studies, and       > class-action lawsuits in later years. What is the term?       >       > D2. This term was used by Garth Turner in 2006 in conjunction       > with the evacuation of Canadian citizens from Lebanon, during       > the Israeli-Lebanon crisis. It refers to people who had       > emigrated to Canada, obtained citizenship, and then moved       > permanently back to their original home country, keeping       > their Canadian citizenship as a safety net. Many sources       > had used the term before that time, but Turner was the first       > MP to use it, questioning the $75,000 cost per evacuee       > for people who almost all returned back within a month.       > What is the term?       >       >       > * E. Describing Internet Memes       >       > E1. You go to an interesting or unusual place, and lie face       > down on the ground. Your hands must both touch the sides of       > your body while lying down. A friend takes a picture of you       > while you are face-planted, and uploads it onto the Internet.       > What is this fad called? It was featured in an episode of       > NBC's "The Office".       >              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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